• How does the number of beans being passed change as your finger combinations change? The more you moved away from your thumb the numbers decreased. Also, when you didn't use your thumb the averages decreased dramatically from 77 to 21.5. This is because you use your opposable thumbs in everyday life to grab bigger and heavier things while you use your UR2 and UR3 less often.
  • What are some conclusions you can develop from looking at this data? Some conclusions I can develop from looking at this data is that when people bean passed in a combination that included their UR1, the numbers were higher than the number of bean passes without their UR1 in their combination.
  • What might 2 or 3 sources of error that occurred during this experiment? 2 or 3 sources of error that might have occurred during this experiment are that people might have miscounted, for one finger combination more time than 1 minute was added accidently, or people did not go at the same rate in each finger combination.
  • How does this lab demonstrate "ADAPTATION"? This lab demonstrates adaptation because your finger combinations that did not include your UR1 specifically would adapt to passing beans at a fast rate. This is because you use your opposable thumbs everyday so you can adapt to using finger combinations without your UR1 in things like bean passing.